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Sophie Lumineau

Researcher at University of Rennes

Publications -  79
Citations -  1316

Sophie Lumineau is an academic researcher from University of Rennes. The author has contributed to research in topics: Quail & Offspring. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 74 publications receiving 1170 citations. Previous affiliations of Sophie Lumineau include University of Vienna & Centre national de la recherche scientifique.

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Influence of a mobile robot on the spatial behaviour of quail chicks

TL;DR: Quail chicks encountered an autonomous mobile robot during their early development that incorporated a heat source that stimulated following of chicks and chicks that grew with the mobile robot exhibited better spatial abilities than chicks grown with a static heat source.
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Epigenetic maternal effects on endogenous rhythms in precocial birds.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that mothers of precocial birds influence epigenetically the ontogeny of endogenous rhythms of the young they raise, as well as rhythmic phenotypes of quail mothers influence the rhythmicphenotypes of their young.
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Trans-generational effects of prenatal stress in quail

TL;DR: Long-term effects of prenatal stress is evaluated by analysing reproductive traits of Japanese quail females and, then, the development of their subsequent (F2) offspring, suggesting trans-generational transmission of prenatal Stress effects, probably mediated by egg compositions of F1PS females.
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Motherless quail mothers display impaired maternal behavior and produce more fearful and less socially motivated offspring.

TL;DR: It is revealed that non-brooded mothers were more fearful and less competent in spatial tasks and expressed impaired maternal care, characterized by more aggression towards chicks, higher activity rates, and more abnormal pacing during the first days of the care period.
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Maternal styles in a precocial bird

TL;DR: Evidence of the existence of a precocial bird species' maternal styles is provided for the first time and it is indicated that maternal styles are key features that help understand nongenomic transmission of behavioural characteristics whose vectors have remained poorly understood.